Ancient Greece Declassified

04 Sappho: The Tenth Muse w/ Andromache Karanika

Nov 21, 2016
Andromache Karanika, UC Irvine classics professor and Sappho scholar, guides a lively tour of Lesbos, Sappho’s social world, and the poet’s performance practices. Short takes cover Sappho’s persona, sexuality, musical innovations, fragment 31, why so much was lost, and the thrill of recent papyrus discoveries.
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INSIGHT

Biographies Built From Poetic Fragments

  • Biographical details about Sappho (parents, brothers) come from later traditions like the Souda and often derive from interpretations of her poems.
  • These sources mix reliable hints (mother named Kleis) with many conflicting paternal names, showing uncertain biography.
INSIGHT

Poetry Of Female Transition And Desire

  • Sappho wrote for women's circles and the transition from girlhood to womanhood, blending passionate desire with ritual and social roles.
  • Her poetry addresses female audiences directly and captures both erotic feeling and anxieties about marriage.
INSIGHT

Sappho's Name As Mask And Persona

  • Sappho's use of her own name mixes real self and poetic persona, acting like a mask that invites both personal and universal readings.
  • Andromache compares this to a chorus leader whose 'I' can stand for a collective 'we'.
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